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Alex and Emma (2003)
Release Date:


MPAA Rating:
PG-13

Rating Reason:
For sexual content, some language

Genre:
Comedy, Drama, Romance

Starring:
Kate Hudson, Luke Wilson, Sophie Marceau, David Paymer, Chino XL

Written By:
Rob Reiner, Adam Scheinman

Director:
Rob Reiner

Official Site:
Alex and Emma (2003)

Synopsis:
"Adam Shipley had given up on love. Art was to be his mistress. And so it was that in the summer of 1924, he took a sabbatical from Andover to write, if not the Great American Novel, certainly something that would make the world sit up and take notice."

Alex Sheldon (LUKE WILSON) is an author whose writer's block is the least of his problems - he also happens to be flat broke and owes Cuban loan sharks $100,000. After hanging him out the window and destroying his laptop computer, the thugs give Alex an ultimatum: pay up in 30 days or wind up dead. The only way Alex is going to get that kind of money is by finishing his novel, which is currently less than one sentence long. He's got some idea of what he wants the story to be; as he puts it, "It's about the powerlessness of being in love, how it devours the insides of a person like a deadly virus. It's a comedy." He just can't seem to get it out onto paper. Now lacking both inspiration and a laptop, Alex secures the services of opinionated stenographer Emma Dinsmore (KATE HUDSON) to help him complete the novel and get paid by his publisher in time to save his skin.

The story of Adam Shipley (also portrayed by LUKE WILSON) soon begins to emerge. The fictional Adam is a romantic young writer who has been hired to tutor the children of Polina Delacroix (SOPHIE MARCEAU), a chic, gorgeous French woman in dire financial straits. The story that reveals itself is of the obsessive love that Adam develops for Polina while ignoring the potential for true love with Polina's au pair, known in successive incarnations as the stern Swede Ylva, Elsa the bawdy German, Eldora the Spanish beauty and down-to-earth American Anna, (all played by KATE HUDSON).

Meanwhile, Alex and Emma spend their days and nights working together on the novel. Emma challenges his ideas at every turn, and her initially irritating but undeniably intriguing input begins to influence Alex and his story. Soon, real life begins to imitate art, and art, to imitate life.

Alex and Emma (2003) | Review

Commitment and Intimacy
MELINDA LEDMAN

 Alex and Emma is an impressive film which explores its themes within a fantastic structure. I was surprised at the negative reviews this film received, but I can understand why. If you go into it looking for a purely romantic, feel-good movie, you will be disappointed….but only because it does not stop there. The writers (4) and director (Rob Reiner) used advanced literary structures to make great statements about art and life. Additionally, I thought the jokes were quite funny and ironic. It seemed to have more comedy than romance (where the problem is typically the other way around) and the jokes were buried in the script so that you had to be listening to catch them. These were some of my favorite things about the movie:

Format:

Click to enlargeThe script follows a typical “frame story” format where the first plot line tells the same story as the second, and the characters correspond with each other. The viewer is asked to understand each story as a clue to the other, so that in the end, one arrives at the whole truth. The movie depicts Alex as a writer and Emma as his stenographer. As Alex dictates his story to Emma, the characters in the novel bear a striking (and intentional) resemblance to the characters in the film. In Alex’s novel, the main character Adam (Alex’s double) falls in love with the beautiful, charming, seemingly wealthy, hard-to-get Polina. Click to enlarge While staying at her house for a summer as a tutor, he meets and also falls in love with the ever-changing “au pair” (Emma’s double). Adam (Alex) must later choose between the two loves of his life. Besides the fact that the four main characters have similar names, the novel he writes also reveals the changing nature of their relationship. Subsequently, both stories unravel together. The film also uses allegory as it explores the relationship between art (Polina) and experience or real life (Emma). Is it possible to have both? More on that later.

As a writer, I am particularly partial to the idea of using stories as a backdrop for reality. It can be said that stories are an excellent medium for expressing and exploring truths. Both the frame story and the allegory accomplish this feat. But, the parable also accomplishes this feat and that was the teaching format Jesus used most often. Jesus regularly explained complex truths using every day scenarios. In fact, I would say he avoided dissertations and lectures, and rather embraced the power of an allegory.

Commitment and Intimacy:

Click to enlargeWhen we first meet Alex, he is portrayed as a desperate, poor, hypochondriac who has suffered a severe blow to his emotions. Having been dumped by his ex-girlfriend, he experiences writers block and cannot seem to find his muse. Under pressure from the Cuban mafia, he whispers a quick prayer in the closet, “God help me.” Enter Emma one scene later. He has lured her to his home under the false pretense of being a lawyer in need of a stenographer. Thus, he begins the relationship with a lie. Click to enlargeNevertheless with some prodding, Emma decides to help him. Alex explains (at her prompting) that his previous book was about a man so afraid of commitment that he thought it would kill him. Nothing has apparently changed. As the two continue working together, Alex suddenly asks, “Who are you?” revealing that over the course of several weeks, he has never taken the time to get to know her. Just as they are getting close, however, Alex tells yet another lie. Emma finally asks about the character Polina, and Alex claims she was an amalgam, a combination of many different women in his life. As Alex and Emma become closer and closer, Alex wants to develop a level of commitment and intimacy (as evidenced by his character Adam who becomes increasingly attracted to Anna because she is “comfortable”), but continues to fear it. It is not until Alex is faced with losing Emma forever (when the real Polina appears) that he finally faces his fears and admits that she is the only one he trusts.

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